Founded in 1957, Modern Age is THE forum for debate and discussion of the most important ideas of concern to conservatives of all stripes. Published by @ISI.
University funding should be tied to basic academic standards—truth, neutrality, and free speech, says @christopherrufo.
Our editor, @ToryAnarchist, joins dozens of other signatories in support.
The Manhattan Statement via @TheFP:
Lance Morrow is one of the all-time greats of print journalism, reaching a readership of millions from the back page of Time magazine.
Austin Ruse explores how he did it in an essay occasioned by Morrow’s memoir from @EncounterBooks.
Modern Age Editor-In-Chief @ToryAnarchist: “I am thrilled to rejoin the @ISI team. As a #CollegiateNetwork alumnus, I know the impact that ISI’s support, training, and mentoring has on talented student journalists.”
isi.org/intercollegiat…
What comes after the death of liberalism?
@DrGeneCallahan talked with the philosopher John Gray, author of “The New Leviathans” @fsgbooks, about Israel’s war, Michael Oakeshott, C. S. Lewis, and more. Read more on our website.
Our new issue is now available on our website!
Featuring @DrGeneCallahan and @Musa_alGharbi on wokeness and social justice, @OscarClarke17 on colonialism and genocide, @bradleybirzer on the science fiction of C. S. Lewis and Ray Bradbury, @JohnGGrove1 on the American spirit, and
“I believe in a conservativism that is anchored in the best of tradition, not just politically or economically, but artistically and culturally.”
@DanaGioiaPoet speaks with our editor @ToryAnarchist (VIDEO):
F. A. Hayek’s career was one long fight against the command-and-control schemes that led to a Great Depression and two world wars.
Read @anne_r_bradley’s 2019 review of Peter J. Boettke’s book on why Hayek’s thought matters for the 21st century:
What makes American nationalism good?
Americans are attached to one another not only by a shared territory, language, culture, or history but also by a political creed.
More from @uaustinorg’s Jacob Wolf:
Burke’s legacy has been bulldozed, burned, and forgotten.
But in 1986, Russell Kirk urged us to remember this defender of order, virtue, and the moral imagination.